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Sequoia C Aug 2012
The plastic bag in a clouded haze
begins to melt beneath a twisted gaze
and the sapphires in the sky lose their grip
and slowly now begin to drip
past the lonely tree that glistens
shining brightly yet no one listens
and the grass it wildly cries
for everything in life that dies.
But how do you explain death
to someone muttering darkly under their breath?
You must pass through Hell to get to Heaven
and the beauty, it will always beckon
but your memories will not forgive
or hide the monsters that in your brain live;
in assurance now we find our names
and hope someday we’ll be the same.
Sequoia C Aug 2012
My teeth are bright, but my hair
is brighter. I collect people like
I read books - picking up
as many as I can but never
reading them all. My things
fall apart because I find them
on the ground. I smoke so much
that sometimes I forget
to smoke. I couldn’t believe in God
so I made up my own religion.

My hair is bright red because
when I run out of answers
I change my hair. I write
in all the margins of my books.
My shoes fall apart faster
than I can run. I walk around
wondering what I appear to be.
My friend told me that God is
watching over all of us. I held
his hand, not because I believed him;
but because it was a comforting thought,
and I was too exhausted to do anything else.
Sequoia C Aug 2012
Feathers I would pick up off
the ground, usually plain dull gray
sometimes with a tinge of white – if you were lucky –
fallen from the sorts of birds you stop noticing
after a few years living in the city,
Pigeons and Seagulls, mostly, but I
would start to notice them, scattered
in the grass or hidden beneath a leaf,
and would carry home these lost relics with me.
At certain thrift shops I could find more exotic feathers –
downy things of softer brown were usually
all I could afford,  
though I coveted the feathers of blue and green,
striking orange, never purple, sometimes red;
the chicken feathers were cheap, but the long striped ones
from their male counterparts, the roosters,
were twenty dollars each. These feathers hold beauty
and a secret that mankind
has long sought after, how these fragile
and soft things could propel a small bird
into the sky, escaping the ground -
oh, how we wish we could follow them -
and so I would collect these fallen pieces of the sky,
not necessarily hoping to fly, but
earnestly harvesting their unnoticed beauty,
remembering that each feather I wear in my hair has
been, up there, in the sky,
supporting a bird as it made its first leap into space,
as it flew in a flock over hundreds of miles
every year, to reach one hallowed spring
where they could find lovers and raise families,
building their own nests, and caring for the young,
with their downy feathers and bright yellow beaks
chirping incessantly for food, and soon
with fresh feathers and plenty of spirit,
out into space they would go, just as their parents had
years before – and I remember that each feather
has been through the universal task of flight
appointed to birds,
so that man can look up into the sky,
shielding the sun from his gaze,
and know there is still hope,
that he, too, can be free
that even though he doesn't possess the godly
gift of flight, the feathers,
something does, and he can watch them all day
if he likes,
and daydream of flying
Sequoia C Mar 2010
I sit and watch; day after day
but still the telegrams say -
THERE IS NO CROP
STAY INSIDE STOP

I watch as the gardener comes;
the lonely girl in the gas mask, who hums
the sad tune of the seed
doomed as a ****

I wonder, how she survives without shoes
for the ground, it may ooze
poison from the air
in the ground, seeps in your hair

She's just another lonely soul
with an empty petunia bowl
and one of those masks
as she goes out to fulfill impossible tasks

I sit night by night, with nothing to do
and by every noon she's come through,
watering the toxic soil,
a source of such turmoil

How can it grow;
among poison, she must know
planting out spores
in the aftermath - of wars

The air is a haze
and I feel left in a daze
when at last one dead morn',
the apocalypse flower is born
Sequoia C Feb 2010
Silly girl,
What did you get your hopes up for?
Soaring like a bird
Straight into the sun
Did you forget, little girl?
Shattered dreams are no fun
All that goes up
Must come down, silly girl
And there's no one to help you now
Why even bother to pray?
You watch silently,
As your balloon flies away
Your eyes are wet
Your gaze is firm
Your lips are steady, watch,
Watch, little girl, dreams are made of porcelain;
Easily broken
And as fleeting as a dandelion chain
Everything slips away
Yet still you hope
Your dreams remain tethered to you
By only a single string
It's all you have; all you know-
Dreams are a deadly thing
Sequoia C Feb 2010
All those fish in the sea
may not be as happy and free
as the ocean appears to be
Sequoia C Jan 2010
I spread my arms open wide
and feel the wave of rain
wash over me,
erasing all the pain.
My hair sticks to my face,
my clothes feel wet and thin,
and I begin to laugh
as water seeps into my skin.
The clouds are looming gray
the sky is much too dark
and even though I'm crying,
I still love this park.
I fall onto my back
getting splashed with the mud
and I'm still laughing
as the rain washes away the blood.
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